Having your main character of your show be the personification of
evil is certainly an interesting choice for Network television, but of
course the Lucifer we get here isn’t quite the one from the Bible
stories but is based on the version created by
Neil Gaiman for his
Sandman graphic novel series. He maybe “
The Fallen One” but that doesn’t mean he is
all bad…or does it?
“I’m not bad. I’m just drawn that way.”
This isn’t the first DC character from their
Vertigo line to make it to television, NBC attempted to make
Constantine
into a television series after failing to get a movie franchise out of
the character, but it failed miserably due to the watering down of what
is intrinsically a very dark character. Now Fox is giving it a go with
Lucifer, and just going by the pilot I think they may heading down that same unfortunate road
Constantine took.
The pilot opens with title card telling us that, “
In
the beginning the angel Lucifer was cast out of Heaven and condemned to
rule Hell for all eternity. Until he decided to take vacation.”
This is certainly an interesting idea and whether this show will explore
just how he pulled this off remains to be seen (or if it will be
cancelled before we find out), but Lucifer walking the streets of Los
Angeles could lead to some real fun television.
The show gets points for not using "Sympathy for the Devil" here.
We first meet Lucifer (
Tom Ellis)
being pulled over by a cop for a traffic violation, he is able to use
his “dark powers” to get at the sinful side of the police officer which
allows him to successfully bribe him. This is a playful Lucifer, more in
keeping with the trickster type of god along the lines of Loki; he
seems to be up here for a good time. What is equally interesting is that
he is not wandering the Earth in disguise but will introduce himself to
one and all as Lucifer Morningstar. Nobody of course believes him.
Theology Note:
The word Lucifer is taken from the Latin Vulgate word meaning "the
morning star" so basically he's going around calling himself Lucifer
Lucifer.
He runs a bar called Lux and is doing his best to forget he ever ruled Hell. His best friend Maze (
Lesley-Ann Brandt)
is a demon who does double duty as bartender and confidante. She seems
unclear as to what her boss is doing here slumming with the mortals. We
shortly meet Amenadiel (
D.B. Woodside)
a dark-winged angel of the Holy Host who really despises Lucifer and
orders him to get back to work running Hell. Seems Heaven is concerned
with what all those demons and tortured souls may be doing without
Lucifer overseeing things.
“Dad says, go to your room.”
This begs the question, “
If Lucifer can just abdicate his job as ruler of Hell why did he wait so long to do so?”
He was cast down there as punishment for rebelling against God, so I'm
not quite sure how you can quit that gig. Which brings us to one of the
major problems I see coming with this show, the dancing around of the
theology of this particular version of God and Lucifer. Is this show’s
God the absentee landlord we got in WBs
Supernatural?
Or are we going to find out that God isn’t allowed to directly
influence things on Earth, which I’ve always found to be a big cop out.
He can send an angel to order Lucifer back to work but he can’t force
the issue himself?
“If he wants me, he knows where to find mind.”
But this show isn’t just about
The Fallen One
and his family issues it’s also a police procedural, and that’s where
it really falters. The “Case of the Week” we get for the pilot is the
murder of pop star Delilah (
AnnaLynne McCord) who Lucifer at some point in time helped her with her career. She drops by Lux to ask Lucifer if she had “
Sold her soul”
to become famous. How she wouldn’t know this is beyond me. Did she
think she signed away her soul while in a drunken stupor? Regardless
while walking out of the club with Lucifer she is gunned down by a drive
by. Lucifer is determined to find out the one responsible and see that
they are punished. This is of course showing us a softer side of the
Devil than we are use to seeing.
“I wonder if I called Dad he’d tell me who did it.”
Now we meet the show’s second lead in the form of Detective Chloe Decker (
Lauren German) who is assigned the Delilah murder case. Her ex-husband Dan (
Nicolas Gonzalez)
is also a homicide detective and he urges her to make this a simple
open and shut case (why is never made clear other than to show he is a
douchebag), but Chloe wants to do a thorough job which somehow entails
teaming up with Lucifer Morningstar. And here is where the premise of
the show gets really wobbly. If we let slide that a L.A. homicide
detective would cruise around town with club owner, one who claims to be
the actual immortal Lucifer, on a case that tangentially involves him
is one thing (and that is a pretty big slide we are allowing here), but
we are now expected to see her teaming up week in and week out with him
on more cases. This makes even less sense than Detective Jane Porter
teaming up with a jungle man to fight crime in the 2003
Tarzan series.
She even allows people to assume she is his partner.
I
may not be an expert on the criminal code but even I know that
impersonating an officer of the law is a big no-no, and I’m assuming at
some point her fellow officers are going to ask who the hell that guy is
that is helping her out on all these cases. We learn that due to a past
event concerning a police shooting she is now ostracized by her fellow
officers, and thus no one will be her partner, but I’m sorry a cop
cannot have a civilian for a partner. Even in the zaniest buddy cop
movie both people involved were actually cops. Even Hooch in
Turner and Hooch was a police dog.
This is no 48 Hours.
At one point during their investigation they go to talk to Delilah’s psychiatrist (
Rachael Harris)
to find out who she was having an affair with, and Lucifer uses his
super sexual powers of attraction to get the name from her and clinches
the deal with an offer of powerfully sinful sex, yet at the end of the
episode he returns to her for not just the promised sex but for her
professional help as well. Clearly the writers were fans of
The Sopranos.
I wonder, does the Devil have a good HMO?
Now
for what works. Tom Ellis seems to be having a lot of fun playing
Lucifer, and his chemistry with Lauren German is quite good. How the
show develops this relationship will be one of the more crucial things
that will decide if the show lasts or is cancelled. At the end of the
episode she is not sure how he survived being shot at because she still
doesn’t quite believe he is
the Lucifer Morningstar, and this
kind of thing can get old real fast. I hope by the second episode she
comes to grips with who she is actually working with.
“We can’t tell my mother, she is very Catholic and wouldn’t understand.”
Of
course once she finally believes he is who he says he is the next
problem will be in giving us a plausible reason for why she doesn’t grab
her cute daughter (
Scarlett Estevez)
and run for the hills. I’m also not completely sold on them being able
to make a solid action drama when one of the main characters cannot be
harmed by anything less than an act of God. Kind of takes the tension
out of gun play and car chases. So yeah, I’m not quite sure this premise
will work over the long haul, as likable as the lead characters are the
very premise is just too shaky to function as such. I could be wrong,
and really I hope I am, but if this makes it to season two I will be
quite surprised.
Unless Lucifer whammies the ratings.
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